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Hunger
begins to take its toll
IRIN
News
September
22, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=80525
Five children
have died in Zimbabwe's southern drought-prone Masvingo province
from severe malnutrition-related illnesses, according to members
of a faith-based mission.
"The children died
of starvation last week," said a member of the Catholic-run
Bondolfi Mission, a member of the Holy Cross Convent, who did not
want to be named. The mission is located in Chivi district. Two
of the children died in the Mapanzure area near the mission, and
three at a clinic in Mukaro Mission in the neighbouring Gutu district.
"There was nothing
the clinic could do to help them - they were severely malnourished,"
said the mission staff member. The children had not eaten for a
week.
Members of the Bondolfi
Mission said they had last seen such levels of malnutrition in the
severe drought of 1991/1992. "During that time, humanitarian
organisations helped to alleviate the shortages by distributing
food aid in communities so the impact was not as severe as were
a witnessing now," pointed out the staff member.
Nongovernmental organisations
in Zimbabwe are in the process of resuming food distribution after
a government ban on their operations was lifted on 28 August. The
ban had been imposed ahead of a second round of voting in the presidential
ballot on 27 June because of the alleged collective anti-government
bias of NGOs.
The most recent data
from 2006 showed that 29 percent percent of Zimbabwean children
below the age of five were stunted or suffering chronic malnutrition,
indicating a lack of nutritious food for a long period of time.
Every evening, children
from villages around the mission arrive at the boarding school run
by the convent to wait for leftovers. "The situation is very
bad," said a nun, and described tear-jerking scenes of children
scrambling for scraps and running back home to share with siblings.
"You feel helpless
because there is not enough food to go around. You can't do much.
Even adults sometimes join the scramble for the food scraps and
leftovers. Just yesterday, an entire village arrived begging for
food," she said.
The mission has tried
to help, at times inviting mothers to do some work at the mission
station. "Only last week we offered six women some work to
do in return for grain and one of them fainted because she was too
weak to finish the task," said a nun at the mission.
"We have witnessed
hunger and food shortages in the past, but this one is the worst.
Our teachers cannot also afford to buy food even when they have
been paid," commented another member of the mission. "Food
costs three times as much as it costs in South Africa and their
salaries are too low to buy enough for themselves and their families
as it has become too expensive."
A government-sponsored
programme to distribute basic commodities at affordable prices is
expected to begin this week, according to the mission. Under the
Basic Commodity Supply Side Intervention (BACCOSI), government provides
food hampers at reduced prices to rural communities.
Expectant
villagers
The International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRC), unaffected
by the government's ban on NGOs, has announced the start of
a food distribution drive targeting those infected or affected by
HIV and AIDS, which will continue for the next nine months.
Trucks loaded with 383
metric tonnes of maize, beans and cooking oil have been dispatched
to feed 24,000 people in eight provinces: Masvingo, Matabeleland
North, Matabeleland South, Midlands, Manicaland, Mashonaland Central,
Mashonaland East and Mashonaland West. The IFRC announced that distributions
would take place on a daily basis, reaching 260,100 people with
monthly food support.
For most of the villagers
whose crops failed because of patchy rains and lack of farming inputs
such as seed and fertiliser, the arrival of food aid trucks is long
overdue as they have struggled for months without aid. A crop assessment
forecast by a joint Food and Agricultural Organisation and World
Food Programme mission, released in June 2008, projected that about
5.1 million Zimbabweans out of a total population of 12 million
would suffer food insecurity by early 2009.
Peter Lundberg, the head
of the IFRC delegation in the capital, Harare, appreciated the Bondolfi
Mission's concerns. "This is a critical period for these
communities. They have faced months without enough food and, for
many families, the situation has deteriorated drastically in recent
weeks."
Françoise Le Goff,
head of the IFRC's Southern Africa zone, said people infected
or affected by HIV and AIDS were particularly vulnerable to food
shortages. "Many of these people are on antiretroviral medication
(ARVs). For these drugs to work effectively, people need food. Without
a full stomach, many of those on [ARVs] are now choosing to default
on their treatment as they can't cope with the debilitating
side effects."
The IFRC said according
to health authorities in Masvingo province, one of the regions worst
affected by the food crisis, 70 percent of people on ARVs have defaulted
in recent months because of food shortages.
A little over
15 percent of the country's population is living with HIV.
According to the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), approximately
1.3 million, or one fifth of all Zimbabwean children have lost a
parent; most have been orphaned by AIDS.
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